"Indian banks need to provide a bare minimum Rs 18,000 crore additionally towards the 12 accounts identified by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) for reference to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) in FY18," the domestic rating firm said.
The report comes a day after the Gujarat High Court allowed banks to go ahead with the move, after Essar Steel, one of the dozen accounts, challenged the RBI directive.
The iron and steel sector will require Rs 10,500 crore of extra provisions and Rs 4,100 crore for the infra sector.
The extra provisioning, which directly impacts the bottomlines, will eat into banks' profits by around 25 per cent in FY18, the report said, adding the impact on return on assets will be 0.12 per cent in FY18.
"We continue to maintain there is an increasing divide between the large and smaller PSBs, with the former having some access to growth capital, better market valuation, and also some non-core assets to divest while the latter would only receive bailout capital if required and would need to ration their capital consumption over next two years."
It can be noted that there have been concerns on banks' profitability since the RBI came out with the 12 account names and asked banks to resolve it by end of the year under the provisions on the IBC.
On a sectoral basis, the rating agency said the weighted average provisioning in the iron and steel sector is highest at 45 per cent because of the deeply entrenched stress, low capacity utilisation and high expected ultimate haircuts.
For infrastructure sector accounts, the average provisions are at 36 per cent.
"The fear of insolvency will force all stakeholders to seek remedial measures and resolve stress swiftly, which will be positive, in the event it occurs. The fear of liquidation or winding up could have a positive impact as stakeholders would be willing to arrive at common ground to escape liquidation, nevertheless haircuts specially towards the larger exposures are inevitable," the agency said.
It expects banks to require Rs 91,000 crore in tier-I capital till March 2019 to grow at 8-9 per cent per annum and Rs 20,000 crore of it will come from the government.
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